Description |
1 online resource (331 pages) |
Series |
Critical Studies in Television |
|
Critical studies in television.
|
Contents |
Critical Studies in Television; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; Table of Figures; List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgments; Epigraph; Introduction -- "Interrogating the Obvious"; Chapter 1 -- "You Cannot Talk to the Guys in the Boat"; The Digital Paradox; Survivor as Society?; Notes; Chapter 2 -- "Apparently Reprehensible Material"; Class as the Uber-narrative; Jameson's Other Works, "Prickly" Writing, and Critics; Survivor Alliances and the Unconscious; Notes; Chapter 3 -- "If It Happens Again ... "; Taking Control; You Will Deny This Three Times |
|
The Emergence, and Fall, of the Hero(ine)A Dream Deferred; Notes; Chapter 4 -- "They're All Lying to Me"; "These Guys Brought the Game in With Them"; "An Alliance of One"; Notes; Chapter 5 -- "A Really Passionate Affair"; Something from Nothing: Colleen and Greg; Nothing from Something: Ethan and "Mama" Kim; Something from Something? The Strange Case of Amazon's Roger; Notes; Chapter 6 -- "These Three Girls Have All Been Riding Coattails"; Gender and Television; Gossipy Girls and Sex-Crazed Boys: Stereotypes in the Amazon; A Pearl Islands Mutiny; Opposites Attract; The Gender-Class Nexus; Notes |
|
Chapter 7 -- "Thrashing Around Like I'm Thirty-Five""Invisible" Indeed; The Importance of Being Eldest: Age and Alliances; Older, Wiser-and More Powerful?; Notes; Chapter 8 -- "This Thing Runs Deeper Than a Game"; African-Americans on Entertainment Programs; African-Americans on News Programs; "A Gross Misrepresentation of Who I Am"; Not-So-Sweet Sixteen; Well Below Average-But Why?; "Playing the Race Card" in the Marquesas; "I Almost Said White Values": The Class-Race Connection; Notes; Conclusion -- "Always Historicize!"; Appendix A -- Synopses of First Eleven Survivor Seasons |
|
Appendix B -- Contestant Profiles and RatingsAppendix C -- Methodology; Bibliography; Index; About the Author |
Summary |
Tribal Warfare thoroughly investigates a central element of the hit reality television show Survivor that the existing literature on reality television has overlooked: class politics. Christopher J. Wright combines textual analysis and survey research to demonstrate that Survivor operates and resonates as a political allegory |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references and index |
Notes |
English |
|
Print version record |
SUBJECT |
Survivor (Television program) http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n00039653
|
|
Survivor (Television program) fast |
Subject |
Reality television programs -- Political aspects -- United States
|
|
PERFORMING ARTS -- Reference.
|
|
Reality television programs -- Political aspects
|
|
United States
|
Form |
Electronic book
|
ISBN |
9780739162026 |
|
0739162020 |
|
0739111655 |
|
9780739111659 |
|